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July 2007

July 31, 2007

Philip J. Gilson, 64, U.S. Marine, Member of Sierra Club and ACLU

Philip J. GILSON Jr., age 64, of Collingswood, passed away on July 30, 2007On July 30, 2007.  Formerly of Audubon. Loved and cared for by his wife of 43 years, Maryann (nee Klaus). Loving Son of the late Philip J. Gilson, Sr. and Grace Gilson (nee Fewer). Beloved father of Phil (Jane) of Clayton, Mike (Sandy) of Audubon, Terry of Audubon and Kate (Dan Powell) of Gloucester City. Dear Brother of Robert J. Gilson of Virginia Beach, Virginia. Cherished grandfather of Nate, Cade, Mattie, Mikey and Lundon.

Philip proudly served our country in the United States Marine Corp and a member of the Marine Corps Association. He was a longtime member of the Harrowgate American Legion Post # 78 in Philadelphia, PA. Philip was a member of the Sierra Club and the ACLU.

Relatives and friends are kindly invited to attend Philip's Life Celebration on Sunday from 1 pm to 4 pm at the Collingswood Senior Community Center: 30 West Collings Avenue, Collingswood, NJ 08108. Parking available at the Center. Cremation is private at the request of the family. Entombment with U.S. Marine Corps Honors in Brigadier General William C. Doyle Veterans Memorial Cemetery, Arneytown.

Please no flowers at the Community Center. Family prefers memorial donations in Philip's memory to Our Lady of Lourdes Foundation: Pediatrics at Osborn Family Health Center: 1600 Haddon Avenue, Camden, NJ 08103. Please write in the memo of the check, Philip J. Gilson. Expressions of sympathy can be e-mailed to the family through the funeral home website www.mccannhealey.com under online obituaries of Philip J. Gilson, Jr.

  

Edward McGann, Army Vet, former owner of The Roof Doctor

Edward Eugene McGANN, of Gloucester City, passed away on July 30 at the age of 68. Formerly of Collingswood and Camden. Beloved Husband of the late Alice Mae (nee McMullen). Loving Companion and Best Friend of 27 years to Patricia Powell of Gloucester City. Devoted father of Angela Lutz (Mike) of Gloucester City, Wayne Wells of Neptune, Richard (Dale) McGann of Lewes, Delaware, Sean McGann of Collingswood and three Sons Edward, George and John.

Dear Brother of Catherine Powell of Westville, Jean D'Agostino of Lindenwold and the late George and Terry. Beloved grandfather of 4 and survived by many nieces and nephews. Edward was born and raised in Camden.

He proudly served our country in the U.S. Army. Edward was a lifetime member of the Townsend C. Young V.F.W Post # 3620 in Gloucester City where he was a bartender for many years.

Before retiring, he owned and operated The Roof Doctor in Pennsauken for over 10 years. Relatives, friends and V.FW. Members are kindly invited to attend his visitation on Friday Evening from 6 to 8 pm at the McCANN-HEALEY FUNERAL HOME: 851 Monmouth Street, (at Brown Street) Gloucester City. V.FW. Service and U.S. Army Military Honors 8 pm in the funeral home. Cremation is private at the request of the family. Please no flowers for the viewing. In lieu of flowers, Memorial Donations in Edward's memory to the Townsend C. Young V.F.W Post # 3620, 24-26 N. Burlington St., Gloucester City, NJ 08030.

Please write in the memo of the check, Edward E. McGann. Expressions of sympathy can be e-mailed to the family through the funeral home website www.mccannhealey.com under online obituaries of Edward E. McGann.

Students In The NEWS

Five Camden County teens were on the winning team at BizEd, a two-week summer program at the Rutgers University-Camden School of Business. The students applied their business knowledge to a case study featuring a food-services organization, and presented their conclusions before a panel of executives. Winning laptops for their accomplishments were: James Ruggero, Haddonfield Memorial High School; Jalil Farid, Pennsauken High School; Katie Hunt, Highland High School; Brendon Chan, Sterling High School and Marlene Erasmus, Timber Creek High School. The five were among 25 rising seniors, each selected by his or her school, to take part in BizEd, July 9-19.

Other Camden County participants were Audubon High School's Brooke Szymanski and Jeff Wade; Mercedes Still, Camden Academy Charter High School; Xavier Stridick, Cherry Hill West High School; Emma Boorboor and Allison Roddy, Eastern Regional High School; Charles DiGuglielmo, Paul VI High School; Anthony Bramble, Gloucester City High School; Elizabeth Gercke, Haddon Township High School; Sarah Martino, Pennsauken High; Miguel Vasquez, Triton Regional High School; Lauren Lambert and Kaitlyn Spink, Winslow Township High School; and Eric Kennedy and Luis Lopez, Woodrow Wilson High School.

Lisa Minto of Voorhees is this year's recipient of the Lois Forrest Scholarship Fund award, bestowed by Medford Leas residents. The fund was established as a tribute to Forrest, who retired in 2000 after 21 years as executive director of the retirement community. The $2,500 award is made based on merit, community service and academic achievement. Minto, a receptionist at Medford Leas, received her associate degree from Burlington County College this year and plans to enter Rowan University in the fall with a double major in special education and sociology.

Beth Hartey and Floriya Tkachuk, both of Cherry Hill, and Lauren Reilly of Oaklyn were among seven area residents who recently attained a bachelor of science degree in nursing from the Drexel University College of Nursing and Health Professions. The five-year program includes three six-month, on-the-job training assignments. Student nurses are paid to work in health-care support roles and as unlicensed patient-care assistants at health-care organizations.

J&J Snack Foods Corp. of Pennsauken has received a $49,600 New Jersey Department of Labor customized workforce grant, developed by the Gloucester County College Continuing Education Division. The grant makes training courses available through the GCC's Business and Industry Training Center. Through the grant, which runs until November, employees will be able to receive instruction in such areas as personal-computer training, customer-service skills, general finance, business communications, operations management and welding. The Camden County facility employs 750 people.- Lea Sitton Stanley

Source: http://www.philly.com

Building & Housing Department Moving to new Location

Dscf5779 The Gloucester City Building and Housing Department is moving to its new location at 700 Somerset Street

(previously the Camden County Health Center next to the Dining Car Depot on Monmouth St. along the railroad)

The office will be closed Thursday, Aug.2nd and Friday,August 3rd. The Department will reopen for business on Monday August 6th at 9AM.

Phone numbers will remain the same.

Photo:  Joe Stecklair , left and John Stiefel, officials of the Building and Housing Department have been working in their spare time for several weeks to make repairs to their new office.

Letters:Bells Farm Senior Citizens Building/Property is a Big Eyesore

Bill, 

My first reaction when I found out they were going to knock down Bells Farm in Bellmawr was disappointment.  Bells Farm was the oldest part of Bellmawr and home to the founding family of the town. 

I resigned myself to the fact that a senior home was going up and maybe it would be a good thing for those who needed such housing. It looks like my initial reaction was the correct one. The complex has been the biggest eyesore around for the past two years. Piles of rusting metal, high weeds, stones and building material have sat out for the past two years where trees were. The construction itself looks cheap, and the accommodations crowded. I guess someone made a nice buck off the construction but those who have to look at the eyesore every day are the poorer for the loss of the farm. 

Jack Heath 

Death Notice: Russell Patton, 79, of Bellmawr

To view obit visit www.mcgfuneral.com,  McGuinness Funeral Home.

Viewing Thursday, 11 AM McGuinness Funeral home, 34 Hunter St. Woodbury

Death Notice: Christopher R. McDonald, age 35, of Gloucester City

Funeral Mass 12 noon Friday at Our Lady of Grace RC Church, Somerdale

To view obit: www.Gardnerfuneralhome.com

Some Bad Teenagers Are Ruining Angel’s Playground

See story on Funding for playground

Dscf4548     A big "thank you" to the "Angel" who provided a wonderful new playground for the children at the corner of Middlesex and Burlington, Gloucester City.

    It is a vast improvement over the sad excuse for a playground that was there before. The kids love and so do the parents.

    The problem with the new playground is the other kids who use it. I am talking about the teenagers that come after the sun goes down and are there until all hours of the night.

    I could live with the noise, but the language used and the mess they leave behind are a disgrace. I have heard the parents of some of the toddlers scold some of the teenage kids for the language used in front of the little ones. The response the adults get is not very respectful. The other night I witnessed a teenage boy (only one in a group of five or six) urinate all over the same wood shavings that a toddler would be playing in perhaps 10 hours later. The way the structure is laid out provides a perfect hiding spot for the kids to sit underneath and smoke cigarettes or what have you. We were all teenagers once so I don't need to spell it out.

    I know that there aren't a lot of options for the teens when it comes to finding something for entertainment, but I do think that if you are taller than four feet and over 6th grade, you really should not be taking advantage of a place that was built for children.

    I don't know if there needs to be more police presence after the children leave or if parents "Watch" group would be effective, but something needs to be done to save this playground from becoming the broken down, rusty, dirty place that was the former playground.

Brad Jeffries, Gloucester City

Gloucester City News: Irish Pub-Style Restaurant to be Built on Burlington Street

By Linda Boker-Angelo

NEWS Correspondent

Plans for a new pub-style family restaurant on Burlington Street are underway.

  Shawn Nachurski and David McDonough, owners of Bridges Real Estate, L.L.C., appeared before the Gloucester City Planning Board last week with plans to transform the former go-go bar known as Billy's Place into an Irish pub-style family restaurant.

  Nachurski outlined plans to renovate and expand the building at 157 Burlington Street, which was built in the 1800s. 

  He said he envisioned a gathering place similar to the pubs in Ireland, where generations of families can gather with their children to share a good meal, hear some traditional Irish music, and socialize with their fellow community members.

  Also, there will be an upscale bar and restaurant on the first floor, with additional seating planned for the second floor.

  Local attorney Charles Wigginton, who represented the applicants, said that Bridges had the opportunity to purchase the property directly behind Billy's Place, on Ridge Street, which will be converted to a parking lot.

  He said this would triple the number of parking spaces available, from the 10 currently available to 36, although City ordinance would require approximately 57 spaces.

  Several neighboring property owners expressed concerns about the need for additional parking spaces that would be created by the new establishment, which Nachurski estimated would hold about 109 patrons.

  Diane Sloan, who owns property across the street from the former go-go bar, said she felt the proposed use did not meet the criteria needed to obtain a variance for the planned expansion.

  She said any benefits were far outweighed by the negative impact created by the need for more parking spaces and the expansion of a "tavern."

  After hearing considerable testimony, Board members voted to approve the variance allowing Bridges to expand the building and accepting the 36 parking spots in lieu of the required 57. 

  Nachurski said, pending approvals, he hopes to begin work on the site in September and have the restaurant open for next summer.

  Wigginton was pleased with the board's decision. "Replacing the go-go bar with an upscale, family-style restaurant will certainly be an improvement that will benefit the community."

  He added that the developers were also fortunate to have the opportunity to purchase the additional lot for parking.

  "I've been doing Planning Board applications in this town for 15 years," Wigginton said, "And I've never had one where the applicants were able to triple the amount of existing parking space available."

  The Board reserved decision as to whether a site plan waiver would be granted as the project progresses.

  Plans were also approved to convert a six-bay self-serve car wash on Route 130 to an automatic carwash.

  Car wash owner Judd Corl said he felt local senior citizens and disabled residents, who might otherwise have a problem cleaning their own vehicle, could benefit from the auto wash. He said currently people must go to Westville or Mount Ephraim for an automatic car wash.

  He said he has been in the car wash business since 1977, and has owned the Route 130 facility for seven years.

  He anticipates having a maximum of two employees and one delivery truck per month to drop off soap and vending supplies. The auto wash would be set to handle 60 cars per hour.

  Cumberland Street resident Barbara Daley complimented Corl on his plans, stating that many disabled residents are unable to wash and rinse their cars.   

  Historic Preservation Commission Chairman David Munn presented an application for the installation of a six-foot fence in the 200 block of Mercer Street. The property owner wanted to protect his large dog from the taunts of nearby children.

   The board also approved that application.

  The next meeting of the Gloucester City Planning Board will be at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday, August 15, in City Hall, 313 Monmouth St.

July 30, 2007

Letters: Teens Are "Skinny Dipping" in Brooklawn

  In the past few weeks, I have that been aware that people, during the early morning hours, were using my backyard pool.

This morning, at 5 a.m., I found four young teenagers in the pool. Although I could have and maybe should have called the police, I did not.

Their response when I asked them what gave them the right to use the pool, they stated others told them they could. I then inquired as to why they thought "other people" who did not live in the house had the right to allow them the use of the pool. In addition, I asked them where their parents thought they were. In bed, of course.

  I then told them to get out of the pool and to let "the others" know that if I ever again find anyone using the pool, I would call the police and have them arrested for trespassing.

  I realize this is a "prank," however the liability to me or any other household where this may be happening is very high.

  Oh, and by the way moms and dads, the girls were naked…

Elena Young, Brooklawn

Gloucester City News Headlines August 2 Issue

City Council remembers Jack Pyrah 

 

Brooklawn Council to spruce up town 

 

School Board hires superintendent  

Jack’s Says Thanks!

It is not possible to express with words how thankful we are to have had such an outpouring of help and support while planning and during the July 14 Rock the Joint Concert. Without the help of the following we would not have been able to accomplish all that we have: GC UEZ, Gina Dunphy for endless hours of planning, Paul Kain for such a great idea and for seeing the event through, GC Mayor and Council for their support and encouragement, GC Business Association for their sponsorship and encouragement, Commerce Bank for their generous donation, GC News for promoting the event, GC Transmission for use of shop and always being great neighbors, Sunoco for use of their space.

Also, Jack's Twin Bar Staff for their support throughout the past four months and for working so hard, GC Police, Fire and EMT's for an outstanding job, County of Camden for a beautiful historical marker and their support, GC Street dept. for a thoroughly outstanding job before, during and following the event, George Kauffman for going above and beyond our highest expectations, Tracy Stainker for always being available to help and great footage of the event, Ashley Stainker for taking good care of our most precious cargo.

Also, Mike Davidson for always being available to help at a moments notice, Bill Aldridge for volunteering to get the work done, Frank Griffith for great workmanship, Frank Coyle and the Highland Tavern for great support and use of extra coolers, the Galligan clan for volunteering, The DeMarco's for volunteering, Page and Tom at Max's Seafood for great advice and also for being available to lend a hand in a pinch, Alicia Cunningham for being so understanding and also for being an awesome big sister.

Also, Jim Kremmel for great advice and support, Mike Morrell for getting us everything we needed, Tara Vautier for always being available and also for awesome friendship, Bill's Vending Co. for installing equipment by the 14th, JPI and Assoc. for use of their property, Ron and Bettyann Rainwater for help and support and also awesome friendship, Steve Rodriquez for a job well done, Maggie Gorman for support and all around assistance.

Also, Chal and Mary Rice for last minute items we forgot, Tom Gurick for being an awesome emcee, Tommy Conwell, Full Blown Cherry and Bill Haley's Original Comets for unforgettable performances, Sunshine Flowers for their thoughtfulness, and lastly to Jack's Twin Bar regulars and teams for years of support and encouragement. We are forever grateful.

Sincerely, Dennis and Tammy Galligan,

(owners Jacks Twin Bar)

Source: Gloucester City News July 26 issue

 

Gloucester City News: Mayor Advisory Committee Conducting Study on Changing Street Names

In memory of some of Gloucester City's local heroes, the Mayor's Advisory Committee will study the feasibility of renaming some treets currently named for name for New Jersey counties.

  Thus, Gloucester City veterans who died fighting for freedom in Korea, Vietnam and Iraq will forever be remembered in the City.

  The veterans' names are: Ronald J. Bates, Harry G. Brannon, Wayne A. Colantuno, Christopher Daniels, C. Richard Eppleman, Paul J. Flaherty, William B. Hamacher, William F. Ridge, John J. Rodgers, Marc T. Ryan, Frank Sullivan, and Michael Walters.

  The streets under consideration are: Warren, Essex, Morris, Mercer, Middlesex, Hudson, Bergen, Monmouth, Somerset, Cumberland, Atlantic, Sussex, and Burlington.

  Some City veterans from previous wars are already remembered with such streets as Barnaby, Baynes, Hickman, Lane, Ellis, Edwards, and Goldy.

  The local VFW Post is also named in memory of Townsend Young.

  Double signage will appear at Broadway intersections for four years.

  This will give everyone a chance to become familiar with the new street names and allow time for residents and businesses to make any necessary address change notifications.

Source: Gloucester City News July 26th issue

 

Richard D. Hubbs, Army Veteran, Gloucester City Volunteer Fireman

Richard D. Hubbs, of Gloucester City,  passed away suddenly on July 29, 2007 at the age of 71. Loving husband of 28 years and together again with Connie J. Hubbs.  Devoted and caring father of Richard D. Hubbs, Jr. (Patricia) of Gloucester City and Alice J. Sharp (Michael) of Sewell. Cherished grandfather of Richard III, Kyle Hubbs, Tina (Christopher) Holmes, Matthew Wilson, Michael Sharp, Jr. and Mason Sharp.  Dear Great-grandfather of Natalie Holmes. Loving Brother of Joseph Hubbs of Audubon, Allen L. Hubbs of Gloucester City, George F. Hubbs of Elk Township, Nancy Quieti of Bellmawr,Edward Hubbs of Gloucester City and the late Hubert Hubbs.

Also, survived by many nieces and nephews.

Richard was a lifelong resident of Gloucester City. He graduated from Gloucester City High School in 1954. Richard proudly served our country in the U.S. Army. He was a 14 year dedicated volunteer for the Gloucester City Fire Department: Station # 51. Richard worked over 20 years at Brandywine Construction and Management in Philadelphia, PA in the maintenance department.

Relatives and friends are kindly invited to attend his viewing on Wednesday Evening from 7 to 9 pm and Thursday morning from 10 to 11 am at the McCANN-HEALEY FUNERAL HOME: 851 Monmouth Street, (at Brown Street) Gloucester City. Episcopal Religious Service 11 am in the funeral home officiated by Mother Bradley of Saint Luke's Episcopal Church in Westville. Interment Cedar Grove Cemetery, Gloucester City.

In lieu of flowers, family requests memorial donations in Richard's memory to the Heroes to Hero Scholarship Foundation: P.O. Box 126, Gloucester City, NJ 08030. Please write in the memo of the check, Richard D. Hubbs. Expressions of sympathy can be e-mailed to the family through the funeral home website www.mccannhealey.com 

see Connie Hubbs Obit
 

Continued: A Look at the Port of Gloucester City and other South Jersey Ports on the Delaware River

see Sunday's story

…From the pages of South Jersey Magazine…

Author: Tara Nurin

"The South Jersey ports are a main contributor to air pollution in the South Jersey/Philadelphia region," warns Doug O'Malley, the field director for the advocacy group Environment New Jersey. He says Camden, Burlington and Gloucester counties are "out of attainment with the [Environmental Protection Agency] for soot pollution, and soot pollution is honestly the most deadly form of air pollution out there. It's directly linked to cancer. It's directly linked to aggravating asthma, heart disease and heart attacks."

"If you talk anecdotally to teachers or nurses in schools, they'll tell you that 25 percent of the kids in Waterfront South have asthma," cautions Olga Pomar, an attorney with South Jersey Legal Services who represents clients from Camden's Waterfront South neighborhood. Waterfront South is a tiny enclave of impoverished homes that's buried deep within the port area and imprisoned by heavy industry on all four sides. Some of its 1,700 residents are suing their industrial neighbors over the pollution they emit.

"People in Waterfront South and most of Camden have elevated lung cancer rates, and overall, Camden has high lung, esophageal, stomach, pancreas, liver and kidney cancer vis a vis the rest of New Jersey," Pomar says.

While Pomar doesn't blame the port and its surrounding businesses for the entirety of Camden's poor health, she does feel strongly that the port "really has a major detrimental impact on quality of life." Pomar suggests the SJPC could mitigate some of the damage by following the path of some North Jersey ports that are looking to implement new environmental regulations pioneered in Southern California. There, the ports of Long Beach and Los Angeles have just announced a plan to eventually ban all but the newest, most clean-driving diesel trucks. And California Senator Barbara Boxer has introduced federal legislation that would keep any large commercial or recreational vessel that doesn't significantly reduce its soot-causing sulfur emissions out of American ports.

But the SJPC counters that Camden ports are appropriately eco-friendly by pointing to several new initiatives, including modern electric cranes; retrofitted machinery to reduce emissions; tree-lined environmental berms that act as buffer zones between the port and residential areas; not to mention a stated objective to carry more cargo to nearby destinations via lower-emission boats rather than dirty trucks.

But greening every aspect of the terminals can't save the region's environment from an incredibly controversial potential eco-disaster that's coming up the river. The true enemy of life along the Delaware, warn environmentalists, is a recently approved project to dredge the river to allow for larger, more profitable ships to enter Philadelphia and South Jersey ports.

"It threatens drinking water supplies; it threatens the aquifer that runs below the river; it threatens horseshoe crab populations, oyster populations. Many of the creatures that depend upon the river—their habitat will be destroyed in this process," cries Sharon Finlayson, chair of the New Jersey Environmental Federation.

Finlayson and other New Jersey environmentalists furiously accuse Gov. Jon Corzine of caving to pressure by his gubernatorial counterpart in Pennsylvania, who, after many years, finally persuaded New Jersey's executive officer to allow the river channel to be deepened by five feet. This past May, Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell announced victory for his dredging agenda, which he and the Philadelphia trade unions insist will create high-paying jobs (with some in New Jersey) and allow Delaware River ports to compete with others for the heftier ships that are increasingly favored on the high seas.

Although the deepening project has long been opposed by politicians on this side of the river primarily for environmental reasons, New Jersey port operators say dredging the Delaware River will actually benefit them just as much as those in Pennsylvania.

"South Jersey ports will also be able to bring in not just bigger ships but ships that carry more cargo," says SJPC executive director and CEO Joseph Balzano. "You're always competing with other port facilities for ships. If they're going to increase the depth of the other port facilities, in order to compete we've got to have it here," agrees Holt's head of security, Robert Fair.

Gloucester's leadership too believes that meeting the demands of tomorrow's shipping industry is a necessary component of their dreams to ensure a viable and thriving future for their city. Like the river, the tides of economies are cyclical, and Gloucester's political captains are investing in the notion that drawing inspiration from its ship-dominated past can provide a business model for its resuscitated destiny. Although the days of the old-fashioned wooden sailboats and the steamboats that carried goods to and from New Jersey are long gone, they hope to be ready to greet the mammoth steel-hulled freightliners carrying many tons of cargo that can help ensure the city's economic vitality. It's only with the foresight and ability to address the current and future realities of the shipping industry that they can safely envision dollar signs and renewed glory for Gloucester, heralded by a day when visitors will flock to watch their residents at work at the ports and reflect on a South Jersey waterfront yet again enhanced by commercial ships navigating up and down the Delaware River.

Like Mayor William James muses, "The port has been good to us. And hopefully the water will continue to be good to us."

Renaming Streets in Memory of City’s War Heroes’ A Hardship; Not For Me

Bill's Point of View:

(Hardship: noun, adversity, misfortune, suffering, burden, affliction) 

The proposal to rename some streets in Gloucester City in memory of citizens who have died fighting for our country has started quite a controversy I have been told.  An article about the renaming streets in honor of City heroes appeared in last Thursday's Gloucester City News.  Soon after the phones started to ring in the Municipal Building from people who opposed the idea.

The article mentioned that the Mayor's Advisory Committee was conducting a feasibility study. "Nothing will be done until the study is completed. The public will be informed of the outcome before any streets are renamed," said Ted Howarth a member of the committee. He added the committe welcomes the public input both pro and con.

Those who complained said if their street is renamed it would create a hardship to have to change their driver's license and other documents. I can understand their concerns.  After all the news release that came from the Advisory Committee said the public would only have several months to make any necessary address changes.  Howarth said that part of the release should have said four years instead several months.

I recommend we all take a moment to think about the suggestion before getting upset. Some thought should be given to the "Hardship" that the honorees and their families had to endure. All we are being asked to do is change the address on a couple of documents.  The soldiers gave their lives for us to live in the greatest Nation in the world.  And we are complaining about it being a "Hardship" to fill out a form to change our address on our license or other documents.

I really don't believe any of us would mind that little inconvenience if we took a moment to put ourselves in the shoes of the mother or father who lost a son fighting for our country.

Let's give the committee sometime to study the proposal before jumping to conclusions.  Myself I would love to see the name of my street changed to Hamacher Road.  I knew Billy Hamacher personality, who died during the Vietnam War. He was a great guy.  I also knew the other Vietnam soldiers from our City who died on a first name basis. If Hamacher Road is taken I would have no problem if my street was changed to one of the other names.

And finally I urged our Mayor and Council members not to buckle under just because they are receiving a little flack on what I believe is a great idea.

What is your opinion?

July 29, 2007

Attention GHS Class of 1960: Looking for information

We just learned that Paul Bowman, a GHS classmate, died July 20. Does anyone have any details? Other classmates are asking…..

Thanks,

Nancy and Bill Taylor, Gloucester City High School, Class of 1960

The Breakfast Club Members Have Trouble Running A 50-50 Drawing

Breakfast_club_july_meeting_023

The Gloucester City Breakfast Club met on Saturday July 28 at the Dining Car Depot.  The club held its first official 50-50 Drawing using a roll of number tickets. In the past your number was written on a little tag or your name was written on the back of a dollar bill.  But there was still problems with this simplified new method on Saturday.

You have to understand some of these individuals only get out on weekends. Anyway on Saturday one member, who will remain anonymous, didn't know he was suppose to keep one ticket and throw the other in the bucket. Instead he placed both tickets into the tub and as a result it  took sometime to determine the winner.   Tom ChooChoo Murphy, who took control of the big drawing, would call out, "  Ticket 001", no one answers;  "Ticket 002", no one answers.  It continued like that for 30 long minutes. Don't ask how it happen, just remember you will be old someday too! 

"Hopefully when the time comes our families will commit all of us to the same nursing home so we can continue the laughter ", said Murphy.

Waiting for the drawing to be completed outside of the restaurant were: from left, Jim Coppola, Ed Simila, Joe Boulden,   Frank (aka Reds)  Grandizio,  Butch Shaffer,  Chalie Pitzo,  Frank DeFelice,  Mike Green,  Joe Miller and Ron Villanova. Actually these guys were trying to skip out without paying their bill. And the photo had to be taken with the wall in front of them because they wore their breakfast on the clothes. Take my word it was Nasty looking. Especially Shaffer.

Inside fighting over the winnings were: John Hindsley, Bill (Wibby) Yeager, Bob Sliwa, Bob Bevan, Harry Blymer,  Earl Kaighn, Bill Cleary, Gary Marcucci, Len Lacovara, Chalie Tourtual,  Joe DiGiacomo, Bob Kline, Walt Hall and Ron Raube.

Oh the winner of the drawing ? For the second month in a row it was Grandizio.  Just once you would think he would pick up the tab for breakfast.  The Club sends get well wishes to member Gary Gross, who underwent surgery a couple weeks ago.  Gary, who resides in Florida with his loving wife Carol, is doing great.

Treasurer report:  B. Cleary and Pitzo opened a bank account recently at the The Bank in Bellmawr.  July statement shows there is a total of $153 in the account.

Next meeting is Saturday, August 25th at 9 AM.

author: Lois Lane,  Gossip Columnist for The Notebook

see July Photo album

Death Notice: Connie J. Hubbs & Richard D. Hubbs

Services for Connie J. Hubbs and Richard D. Hubbs, Husband and wife of 28 years, both of Gloucester City.  

 

Relatives and friends are kindly invited to attend Connie and Richard's viewing on Wednesday Evening from 7 to 9 pm and Thursday morning from 10 to 11 am at the McCANN-HEALEY FUNERAL HOME: 851 Monmouth Street, (at Brown Street) Gloucester City. Episcopal Religious Service 11 am in the funeral home officiated by Mother Bradley of Saint Luke's Episcopal Church in Westville.

Interment Cedar Grove Cemetery, Gloucester City

see Connie J. Hubbs obit

McCann-Healey Funeral Homea

Connie J. Hubbs, Wife, Mother, Grandmother and Great-Grandmom Dies Suddenly

Connie J. Hubbs (nee Jordan) of Gloucester City passed away suddenly on July 25, 2007. She was 52. Loving wife of 28 years to the late Richard  Hubbs. Beloved daughter of Josephine Jordan (nee Yost) of Mansfield, Ohio and the late Donald Jordan. Devoted step-mother of  Richard D. Hubbs, Jr. (Patricia) of Gloucester City and Alice J. Sharp (Michael) of Sewell. Cherished grandmother of Richard III, Kyle Hubbs, Tina (Christopher) Holmes, Matthew Wilson, Michael Sharp, Jr. and Mason Sharp.  Loving Great-grandmother of Natalie Holmes. Dear Sister of Larain May of Ohio.

Connie was born and raised in Mansfield, Ohio. She has lived in Gloucester City for the last 30 years.

Relatives and friends are kindly invited to attend her viewing on Wednesday morning from 11 to 12 Noon at the McCANN-HEALEY FUNERAL HOME: 851 Monmouth Street, (at Brown Street) Gloucester City. Episcopal Religious Service 12 Noon in the funeral home officiated by Mother Bradley of Saint Luke's Episcopal Church in Westville. Interment Cedar Grove Cemetery, Gloucester City. There will be no evening viewing. Family requests that memorial donations in Connie's memory to the Heroes to Hero Scholarship Foundation: P.O. Box 126, Gloucester City, NJ 08030. Please write in the memo of the check, Connie J. Hubbs. Expressions of sympathy can be e-mailed to the family through the funeral home website www.mccannhealey.com under online obituaries of Connie J. Hubbs. Funeral Arrangements and Inquiries may be made through: McCANN-HEALEY FUNERAL HOME

Heroes to Hero Scholarship Winners

By Bill Bates
NEWS Correspondent & Committee Member

The Heroes To Hero Foundation, Inc. recently presented three $1,000.00 scholarships to graduating seniors from three area high schools for academic excellence as well as community involvement. The scholarships are awarded in honor and memory of Tommy Stewart III, Jim Sylvester, and John West Sr. and the selfless dedication they gave to their respective departments and community's they so faithfully served.

Another check (not pictured) was also presented to the Camden County Hero Scholarship Fund, Inc. (www.camdencountyhero.com) in the amount of $5,000.00 to be used towards college educations for children of permanently disabled or deceased firefighters, police officers, and emergency medical personnel from Camden County.


051407_hth_ck_pics_007 2007 HEROES TO HERO SCHOLARSHIP WINNERS - From Left to Right are Heroes To Hero Committee Treasurer Wayne Hughes, Mount Ephraim Mayor Joe Wolk, Gloucester City High School Senior Kyle Kramer, Gloucester Catholic High School Senior Matthew Orlando, Former Camden County Freeholder Tom Gurick, Audubon High School Senior Joanna Halliburton, Gloucester City Mayor Bill James, Heroes To Hero Committee member Anne Marie Smith, and Gloucester City Councilman Nick Marchese.

The Heroes to Hero 5-K Run/Walk held its first race on Saturday, October 26, 2002. The event was organized in July of 2002 by one of the brother firefighters from Gloucester City Fire Department, a Gloucester City Police Officer and a local civic leader. The three avid runners decided to remember and honor the lives and careers of three very brave men. On July 04, 2002, Firefighter Thomas Stewart III of the Gloucester City Fire Headquarter, Chief James Sylvester of the Mount Ephraim Fire Department and Deputy Fire Marshal John West Sr. of the Camden County Fire Marshal's Office all died tragically while attempting to save the lives of three trapped little girls in a house fire. All six had perished.

PROUD RECIPIENT - GCFD Lt. Jerry Hubbs shakes hands with Gloucester City High051407_hth_ck_pics_004 School Senior Kyle Kramer as Mount Ephraim Police Corporal Wayne Hughes - Retired and the Heroes To Hero Committee Treasurer, prepares to present Kyle with his check. Committee Member Anne Marie Smith looks on.

The three man committee had quickly grown to five, then seven and presently has 13 members and nearly 200 volunteers who participate on race day! The help doesn't stop there. Along with the Gloucester City and Mount Ephraim Fire Departments, six other fire departments send crews to assist with aerial ladder displays along the race route each year. Volunteers from various civic organizations assist with food and beverage service, runner's assistance, registration, flagman at corners and local ambulances help provide emergency medical services. The event is not just a 5-K Run/Walk, it is a day of remembrance and celebration that begins the night before the race and continues throughout race day with an awards ceremony followed by a block party.

Participants meet in Gloucester City and are bused to the start line in Mount Ephraim. From there, participants run or walk back to Gloucester City where they left their vehicles. The Heroes to Hero motto is "Retracing our Fallen Brothers Footsteps". The race has a very sentimental significance. It begins at the Mount Ephraim Fire Department and proceeds to finish at the Gloucester City Fire Department, passing by the homes of the three fallen heroes and retracing the paths that each one took that night when they got up out of their beds to help someone that they had never even met before.

The Heroes to Hero 5-K has grown to be one the biggest, fastest, most complete 5-K events in the tri-state area. The event has drawn past Olympians, world class runners from Morocco, Russia, Kenya, Trinidad, and Canada. They have had participants from California, Georgia, Oregon and many "closer to home" states. The record breaking times compare to some of the fastest 5-k street races in the United States. [Men 14:08, Women 16:08].

Last year the event registered 1000 participants and awarded over $8000 in cash and prizes! It is a fun filled day with live music and Dj's at six different locations throughout the race and the food is outstanding! [Pasta party, soft pretzels, cakes and crackers, and plenty of beverage for every age].

Most importantly, all of the efforts mentioned above are for one reason; to remember the character and bravery of Tommy, Jim and John. Three awesome men who made an incredible impact on their profession as well as their communities. As long as the Heroes to Hero Foundation is around, their sacrifice will be remembered forever!

This years' race will be held on Saturday, October 13, 2007 starting at 9 a.m. SHARP! The last bus will leave GCFD at 8:30 a.m. For more information about the race or the scholarship program, please visit www.heroestohero.com or you may contact the Race Director at 856-456-4637 if you would like to help in any way.

Pet Tips: The Leader of the Pack by Alan

Dog Quote: They never talk about themselves but listen to you while you talk about yourself, and keep up an appearance of being interested in the conversation.
....Jerome K. Jerome

PHOTO; LACEY, Feb. 2007
*********************************

One of the first and most important steps in dog training is to get the respect and confidence of your dog. As mentioned in previous newsletters dogs are pack
animals, and there always must be a leader of the pack.You need to ensure that your dog understands that you are his or her leader.

Once you've done that you will have gained the respect and confidence of your dog. Having done this will make dog training a whole lot easier for you and a far more pleasurable experience.

Failure to gain the respect of your dog will result in a disobedient animal, as they will not look to you as the lead dog, and it is only the lead dog that they will look to for direction.

While most new puppy owners love to give their animal love and affection, they also need to be aware that leadership and respect are equally important. In fact, I would go as far as to say that leadership and respect are more important, because it is only when you get that from your dog that you can truly enjoy the benefits of having a dog
in the family.

And the sooner you get your respect and leadership the more enjoyable life will be for both you and your dog, and the sooner and easier it will be to have your dog fully trained. The longer you leave the process of training your dog the more difficult it will become, as habits of old dogs are harder to break.

Shallow shorelines can be a good place to fish

By Doug Skinner

Bass The shallow lakes of South Jersey offer a unique chance for productive shoreline fishing.

During the early spring, these shallow areas are fishing hot spots. The water is starting to warm up and many fish are moving into the shallows to spawn. Fishing for largemouth bass from the shoreline can become difficult in the summer. Warmer water forces some of the larger fish into the deeper holes that are usually outside of the casting area. That certainly does not mean it is impossible to catch a nice fish from the shore, all you need is patience and persistence.

Sunfish, of all varieties, and chain pickerel hang close to shore throughout the summer. Bass and pickerel will cruise the shallows feasting on smaller sunfish and minnows even on the hottest days. The days are much longer in the summer, passing a lake at 5 p.m. no longer means that there is only an hour of sunlight left.

Some of the best summer fishing happens after dark. When the water temperature cools the fish come out of their summer holes and hit the beaches looking for a meal. All that is necessary to enjoy a few evening hours at the lake is some easy to find and inexpensive equipment.

For a fishing rod, you'll want something that can fit in the backseat, or even in the trunk. A 5-foot, 6-inch rod can easily fit into most trunks. A one-piece rod that is 6-foot or more has a greater chance of ending its life in the quick slam of a car door.

Travel rods, which come in numerous pieces, can fit snuggly beneath a seat. However, rods made from multiple pieces do not always offer the same strength that is often found in a one-piece rod. The one-piece construction offers a sturdier, more dependable rod for easier hook sets.

A small spinning reel spooled with about 120 yards of 8-pound test will match the rod. It is always good to use a slightly heavier line in the summer, as it will suffer less breakage due to the line abrasion that occurs when fishing in heavily weeded areas close to the shore.

When you are exploring the shoreline, it is better to keep your favorite lures contained in something that is light and easy to carry. Small canvas tackle bags are very effective. These bags will be able to hold an adequate variety of lures to cover your basic fishing needs, while remaining easy to manage.

In choosing a bag for this purpose, look for something with a shoulder strap. The shoulder strap will keep your lures at a convenient distance allowing your hands to remain free. There are hundreds of different lures on the market, but rubber worms/lizards, jigs, and topwater lures will prove the most effective in the summer months. Rubber worms/lizards are very effective in most situations especially in the lily pad beds. Weedless jigs are very effective when fishing downed trees or other brush that may lurk in the water close to the shoreline.

Topwater lures will offer a change of pace when lures beneath the water are not producing. These lures also produce dramatic strikes from hungry fish and are usually most effective at dusk or right after dark.

Unfortunately, we don't all have access to a boat. For those who do, you don't have access to it all the time. So, with a little preparation, and room in the car, you will never again miss the opportunity to stretch some line on the way home from work or school.

There are lakes all over South Jersey just waiting for you and your family to enjoy. Kids can have just as much fun fishing as they can playing video games so get them outside and stretch some line.

Doug Skinner covers freshwater fishing for the Courier-Post. He runs a fishing club at Gateway High School and is a volunteer fishing instructor for the Boy Scouts. He can be reached at sjoutdoors@gmail.com

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A Look at the Port of Gloucester City and other South Jersey Ports on the Delaware River

…From the pages of South Jersey Magazine…

Author: Tara Nurin

The trade industry operating along our Delaware River shoreline has kept our waterfront profitable for years. Even with some modern challenges, it still thrives like the days of old…

Gloucester City, New Jersey: Old timers recognize its proud heritage as a thriving port city—a city that grew and prospered from the importation of cotton and textiles that clothed thousands of families throughout New Jersey in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. But younger generations might scoff in distaste at the mention of the hamlet whose west end is sliced in half by the dominating structure that is the Walt Whitman Bridge.

PHOTO: cargo containers are being unloaded off a ship docked at Holt Marine Terminal in Gloucester City. In the foreground is the Walt Whitman Bridge.

These generations, too, know Gloucester City. But their mind's image is of an old working-class town that's losing population and offers outside pleasure seekers no incentive to visit.

It's not that no one comes to Gloucester City. In fact, up to 500 workers pour through Gloucester's borders every day during peak shipping season to perform their jobs operating South Jersey's busiest private general cargo port, located just north of the bridge. But now the city's largest source of jobs is also favored to become a source for a fresh influx of tourists.

In an effort to restore Gloucester's lost luster, elected officials will soon capitalize on the port as somewhat of a marketing tool to lure residents and visitors to a developing live-work-play waterfront promenade that offers an opportunity not found anywhere else in South Jersey: a chance to pass a leisurely afternoon shopping and relaxing while watching those 500 port workers relieve dozens of ships of their exotic cargo—grapes, plums, peaches and berries from Chile, citrus from South Africa, plywood from Brazil.

In a scene reminiscent of Gloucester's more glorious past, a unique glimpse at modern international commerce will reveal itself while you sip your cool riverside drink. The activity at Gloucester's bustling port, owned by Holt Logistics, which also runs the Packer Avenue Marine Terminal in Philadelphia, illustrates the contemporary realities of ports in present day New Jersey. Although shipping no longer dominates the economic landscape as it once did, it's again commanding a prominent position in the state's marketplace.

The four currently operating public port terminals managed by the South Jersey Port Corporation (SJPC), with three in Camden and one in Salem City, and a handful of privately run ports are importing and exporting at an unprecedented pace.

"As America's economy has changed and as we participate to a greater extent in the global economy, the water highway is the highway to the global market in large parts," explains John Burzichelli, mayor of Paulsboro, which will soon be home to the first deep-water general cargo port constructed on the Delaware River in roughly 40 years.

The creation of such a major SJPC port, plus two others under consideration for Gibbstown and Carney's Point, is a testament to the growing role of South Jersey's ports in the nation's economy. SJPC ports process more imported wood products than any in America, and Del Monte's largest and busiest fruit distribution center is located at the Broadway Produce Terminal in Camden.

In addition, increased trade with China has helped the Port of Camden beat its own cargo records each of the last four years. By importing materials like wood, steel and cocoa beans, and exporting scrap metal, cement and industrial equipment, 3.8 million tons of cargo passed through the Beckett Street, Broadway and Broadway Produce terminals in 2006. New storage facilities should soon make Camden the primary importer of cocoa beans in the U.S.

Every day, dozens of tractor trailers and trains roll in and out of Camden laden with these foreign items destined for warehouses and stores all over the country. And even though a housewife in Wisconsin isn't likely thanking Camden's port facilities when she selects fruit at her local Piggly Wiggly, perhaps people in Camden should thank her for buying them. Not only do the Camden ports provide jobs to 23,000 direct and indirect employees, they also contribute $2 million per year to the city in lieu of taxes, and they drive other heavy manufacturing, processing and transportation industries to locate around them.

As is the case in Camden, heavy industries frequently set up shop near ports to easily receive raw materials and ship finished products; take advantage of conducive zoning laws; and, in this case, situate themselves on state-owned land where they won't have to pay city taxes. Sure, the scrap metal and cement plants that line Camden's southern waterfront may not be sexy, pretty, or even smell good, but they, too, employ residents of the country's poorest city and through SJPC make payments into its coffers.

While Camden's ports are by far South Jersey's busiest, it wouldn't be fair to overlook the Port of Salem, 40 miles southwest. Reopened by the city in the 1970s, Salem's 325-year-old port enjoys a bustling trade with Jamaica, Bermuda and other Caribbean islands. Like the majority of Delaware River ports, its two public and private terminals are considered "niche ports," which means they build the necessary infrastructure to specialize in trading specific products with specific countries instead of accepting massive quantities of assorted cargo.

Salem, as a smaller port, has established itself as an affordable alternative to bigger harbors like Philadelphia or Wilmington, DE, and maintains close connections with the island nations that typically send ships carrying fewer items. The SJPC has run it since the mid 1990s, when the city's public officials discovered it wasn't financially feasible for them to do it. Since then, the agency has begun renovating the facilities. "Now we're starting to see barges every week," crows Mayor Earl Gage. "It's very exciting. More Salem people are being put to work."

Up in Paulsboro, the mayor expects nothing less for his residents, who will benefit from hiring preferences when its port opens in four to five years on land formerly used for a British Petroleum tank storage site and a Dow Chemical sulfuric acid plant. He expects the port to create up to 2,000 jobs—a number that's boosted by the fact that Paulsboro, like most other South Jersey terminals, will be a "great bulk facility," indicating a tendency away from the enormous rectangular intermodal containers that go directly from ship to truck and vice versa without much need for handling by port workers. Because these great bulk facilities instead receive shipments packaged in crates, the terminals are often equipped with on-site or nearby processing plants.

"Great bulk facilities are a lot more labor intensive because you have the potential to have processes that involve either assembling products when they come in or manufacturing something…on site," says Mayor Burzichelli.

But because great bulk facilities berth on-site and adjacent industrial plants that often require great numbers of trucks to carry in supplies and carry out market-ready goods, these sites sometimes pose additional hazards to the surrounding communities. In Paulsboro, the forces behind the project promise they're being proactive in averting any disturbance from trucks that would barrel down the roads that wind through the ballparks and post-World War II homes clustered near the site.

"We're going to have an overpass that's going to lead directly from Exit 19 [on Interstate 295] for a very short stretch of road then will jump right over the creek and land directly on the port site," Burzichelli says.

Inhabitants of the densely populated communities in nearby Gloucester City might envy that particular bit of infrastructure. Although most say Holt Logistics has been a considerate corporate neighbor, they're irked that so many of the long-distance truck drivers who service the port get lost coming off the highway. Instead of staying on designated truck routes to reach their destination, they rumble loudly through their narrow residential streets.

"All hours of the night and morning, all you hear is trucks coming back and forth," gripes Robert Bishop, Jr., who lives on one of those streets. "It's nerve-wracking. You can't sleep through the night."

Gloucester's mayor says Holt's management is working on a solution. But the annoying noise could prove the least of complaining neighbors' concerns, considering that the movement and idling of the diesel-powered trucks, ships and machinery at the ports create immense levels of pollution that can devastate the health of those who live nearby.

continued Monday

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July 28, 2007

Photos from the Tragic July 4th 2002 Gloucester City Fire and its Aftermath

LAD T

The Courier Post has a photo gallery on its site pertaining to the July 4th, 2002 tragic fire in Gloucester City. To view the gallery click the link below.

CP_gallery_head.jpg slideshow_fade.jpg  photo ...


Sculptor Brian Halon works on a model of the sculpture of Firefighter Thomas Stewart, III, which will stand in front of the Gloucester City Fire Department, .